Ratings5
Average rating4.4
He’s controlled. Meticulous. Immaculate. No one would expect the proper Duke of Westmead to be a member of London’s most illicit secret club. Least of all: his future wife. Having overcome financial ruin and redeemed his family name to become the most legendary investor in London, the Duke of Westmead needs to secure his holdings by producing an heir. Which means he must find a wife who won’t discover his secret craving to spend his nights on his knees – or make demands on his long scarred-over heart. Poppy Cavendish is not that type of woman. An ambitious self-taught botanist designing the garden ballroom in which Westmead plans to woo a bride, Poppy has struggled against convention all her life to secure her hard-won independence. She wants the capital to expand her exotic nursery business – not a husband. But there is something so compelling about Westmead, with his starchy bearing and impossibly kind eyes -- that when an accidental scandal makes marriage to the duke the only means to save her nursery, Poppy worries she wants more than the title he is offering. The arrangement is meant to be just business. A greenhouse for an heir. But Poppy yearns to unravel her husband’s secrets – and to tempt the duke to risk his heart. "An astonishingly good debut...The whole book is a breath of fresh air, both a complex, layered story and a soaring romance with two very real people at its heart." -- The New York Times Book Review Author’s Note: Dear readers, please be aware this is an angsty, twisty book written in the style of a gothic romance, and there are some dark moments along the path to a happy ending for our characters. No spoilers here, but if you are a sensitive reader please do consult the reviews before diving in. Yours, Scarlett 2018 Romance Writers of America Golden Heart ® Winner for Best Historical Romance "Desert Isle Keeper...The alliance is unexpected, fascinating and a refreshing departure from typical Regency romances, and I never wanted The Duke I Tempted to end." -- All About Romance "Peckham’s meticulous character work pays off in spectacular, grandly romantic fashion and The Duke I Tempted ends with particularly cathartic and hard-won happily ever after." -- BookPage "Gothic romances are tempestuous by definition, but this one is dramatic even by those heightened standards...If you want something to speed your heart and stop your breath as you read beneath the covers, with only the meager flashlight beam warding off the enveloping night — then you have a rare treat in store." -- The Seattle Review of Books "A one-sitting, late-into-the-night read, The Duke I Tempted ran away with my heart." -- Book Ink Reviews
Series
3 primary books4 released booksThe Secrets of Charlotte Street is a 4-book series with 3 primary works first released in 2018 with contributions by Scarlett Peckham.
Reviews with the most likes.
(3.5, rounding down.) This was quite a bit angrier/angstier than most of the historicals I read, and it was almost unpleasant at times - while I ended up enjoying it, the fights they had were intense and tough to read sometimes. I love a marriage of convenience and all that, but I wish it had been developed a little more why they actually like each other. Also, for a book about a duke who's a member of a secret BDSM club, this was surprisingly light on that aspect?
This is the first, honest-to-god romance novel I've ever read. Why I haven't I read romance before? Mostly because I'm a snob and I thought romance novels were stupid. Lately - and honestly because I got put in charge of our library's romance newsletter - I've been reading more ABOUT romance. About how maybe it's sexist to call it stupid; about how so much of romance is about a woman getting what she wants; about how it's woman-led industry and so forth. Basically, I realized I was being a huge jerk about something I didn't really know anything about.
So I read a review of this - in the NYTimes because I'm still a snob - and read this this weekend when I really needed a break from politics and men. I wanted to read a book where a man was NICE and I KNEW he was going to be nice.
It was cute and sexy and fun. Obviously I should have known all of this about romance before especially since I will defend genre sci-fi and fantasy to the end of my days, but here we are. Better late than never? Maybe romance is another genre I can enjoy!
I still don't wanna read cozy mysteries though.